Do you need a license to work as a mobile mechanic in Ohio? Requirements, fees, and the rules that actually apply.
In Ohio, general mechanical mobile repair is not separately state-licensed, but auto-body and collision work is (Repair Registration (collision) via OH Motor Vehicle Repair Board, roughly see eLicense, plus a No state-wide bond). If you do purely mechanical work you generally need no state license, but verify your specific scope.
| Requirement | Body / collision only |
| License / registration | Repair Registration (collision) |
| Issuing authority | OH Motor Vehicle Repair Board |
| Fee | see eLicense |
| Renewal | — |
| Surety bond | No state-wide bond |
| Scope / notes | Yes — "mobile auto repair" category |
Regardless of your state, these apply to mobile mechanics nationwide:
Not for general mechanical work. Ohio licenses auto-body/collision repair, but pure mechanical mobile work generally needs no state license — verify your scope.
The Ohio fee is approximately see eLicense plus a No state-wide bond.
Ohio does not require insurance to be licensed, but general liability and garage-keepers coverage are strongly advised and are typically required by fleet clients, apartment complexes, and dealer accounts.
Only if you hold EPA Section 609 certification, which is a federal requirement nationwide. It is a single exam, does not expire, and is required before you handle refrigerant on any vehicle.